sberry
Banned
Over the years I have changed my mind a lot about licensing and inspection and codes. A little like politics and marketing, some of the profit is in the delusion and all the big profit really is.
I believe the manufacturers have got their 2 cents in with codes and are not shy about being up on the curve to profit from it. Most of the contention involves cost/ rewards much as if it is a good idea.
The layman on any subject usually jumps to the first most obvious or the buzz word and really follow the bad math mostly because someone smarter is way ahead of them, hence profits.
Most of this is standard equipment and very competitive provided we don't have special needs or a brain fart by a customer and the juice square d gets is minor compared to all the rest of the salesman and the tax man etc.
I heard the argument about ground wires, then gfci and still hear argument about faulty equipment from dipsticks that are functional,,,, I bet engineers and PHD and Lawyers get that same look when I do it to them and they find out I don't know squat.
The code study or concept and some minor reading and really forum made it clear to a career mechanic that I don't know squat.
It doesn't mean I follow every code, it means I try and when I do something I know is ewrong I do so at my own risk. Similar to seat belt use etc. In todays world understand the circuit well enough I wouldn't throw a **** fit but might move the bond to make it fault. Fixing a dryer connection comes to mind. I can fix my own but not the worlds, if I have a chance I upgrade it, changed one in a rental, could have legally left it but having a new legal wire has long range implications for resale.
That wire when it was in question would have fit in my buds old barn for a welder circuit in a back room etc where if the coating was good would still have been an upgrade, hence the inspection question.
I actually know guys with paper pulling permits really figure its up to the inspector to tell what the did wrong, still takes them a couple tries to a simple service. Act surprised when a 6 inch deep wire wont pass, why would you even call an inspector for a single circuit and then not do the most basic functions correctly, aint ran 20 ft of wire on a single circuit and got half a dozen violations and the inspector and the whole NEC are a bunch of retards on the take for the extra 25$ in box clamps it cost.
Most of this seems to live from people who are not functionally illiterate and write way better than I do
I got 3 neighbors are masters that I know. I know a shitload of trades
I believe the manufacturers have got their 2 cents in with codes and are not shy about being up on the curve to profit from it. Most of the contention involves cost/ rewards much as if it is a good idea.
The layman on any subject usually jumps to the first most obvious or the buzz word and really follow the bad math mostly because someone smarter is way ahead of them, hence profits.
Most of this is standard equipment and very competitive provided we don't have special needs or a brain fart by a customer and the juice square d gets is minor compared to all the rest of the salesman and the tax man etc.
I heard the argument about ground wires, then gfci and still hear argument about faulty equipment from dipsticks that are functional,,,, I bet engineers and PHD and Lawyers get that same look when I do it to them and they find out I don't know squat.
The code study or concept and some minor reading and really forum made it clear to a career mechanic that I don't know squat.
It doesn't mean I follow every code, it means I try and when I do something I know is ewrong I do so at my own risk. Similar to seat belt use etc. In todays world understand the circuit well enough I wouldn't throw a **** fit but might move the bond to make it fault. Fixing a dryer connection comes to mind. I can fix my own but not the worlds, if I have a chance I upgrade it, changed one in a rental, could have legally left it but having a new legal wire has long range implications for resale.
That wire when it was in question would have fit in my buds old barn for a welder circuit in a back room etc where if the coating was good would still have been an upgrade, hence the inspection question.
I actually know guys with paper pulling permits really figure its up to the inspector to tell what the did wrong, still takes them a couple tries to a simple service. Act surprised when a 6 inch deep wire wont pass, why would you even call an inspector for a single circuit and then not do the most basic functions correctly, aint ran 20 ft of wire on a single circuit and got half a dozen violations and the inspector and the whole NEC are a bunch of retards on the take for the extra 25$ in box clamps it cost.
Most of this seems to live from people who are not functionally illiterate and write way better than I do
I got 3 neighbors are masters that I know. I know a shitload of trades


Just because u have a license doesnt mean u know what youre doing..